Medical Provider Subcommittee Slides
Transcription
Medical Provider Subcommittee Slides
Medical Provider Subcommittee of the Utah Transparency Advisory Group Sarah Woolsey, MD, FAAFP Medical Director, HealthInsight Utah March 26 &27, 2015 Welcome and Introductions Objectives for this call • Provide Background and Opportunity – National trends and examples – Utah data transparency work • Engage the right providers • Review anticipated work – Recruit volunteers for initial attribution steps • Alert interested parties to meeting time polls coming up • Answer questions OPPORTUNITY Maine Practice Reports Wisconsin Reports Sources of State-wide Data • All Payer Claims Databases (APCDs) – Payor and pharmacy benefit manager originated claims • Practice level submissions of data • Ideal Future state for communities – Clinical and and claim-based data (Health Information Exchange ideal) 2014 Status of APCDs in US Uses For APCD Data • Monitor and evaluate health care spending and cost trends over time • Identify high cost spending by condition and geographic area and evaluate drivers of spending • Produce price transparency reports that identify average price for specific procedures, health conditions, geographic areas and/or payers • Develop and monitor quality using measures that rely on claims data • Develop and monitor payment reform initiatives State Health Access Data Assistance Center (SHADAC), Making Use of All-Payer Claims Databases for Health Care Reform Evaluation July 2014 Background on Utah Transparency Work • 2008-Utah Health Data Committee voted for creation of an APCD – Funding provided via House Bill 133, Health Care Reform (2008) • 2011 first claims submitted (2007-2009) • 2011 HB 128 passed – UDOH Office of Healthcare Statistics designated to utilize APCD – Clinic-level reporting for clinics with 5 or more providers (MD, DO, APRN) – Small area-level reporting for smaller clinics – Denominator of at least 15 patients per measure http://le.utah.gov/~2011/htmdoc/hbillhtm/hb 128.htm Background on Utah Transparency Work (cont’d) • 2013 claims vendor folded • 2013 small area report produced from existing data • 2014 3M became vendor • 2014 statute modified to 106.5 current language Note: Utah has well-developed hospital and Emergency Department databases, and ambulatory surgery databases Current Statute “106.5” • Data are to be reported at the clinic level for clinics with five or more providers • Clinics with fewer providers will have their data aggregated with other small practices by geographic area • Providers are defined as physicians and nurse practitioners, at least one of whom must be engaged in primary care • Care provided by physician assistants may be attributed to their billing provider • Price and Quality data reports to be published yearly, 3 quality areas identified yearly • Data will not be used if not able to be validated Current APCD Submitters • • • • 19 commercial payers Medicaid Fee for Service 3 of the Medicaid ACOs 3 pharmacy benefit managers – CVS, Express Scripts and VRx Note: Data will be 2013-14, then after June, 2015 starts to come in, 6 mo cycles History of the Transparency Advisory Group (TAG) • Formerly the Reporting Task Force (RTF) • Established in 2008 by Utah Partnership for Value (UPV), HealthInsight value-interested group • Part of the strategy to “build stakeholder empowerment through transparency and actionability of healthcare data with focus and attention on consumers” Purpose: Make useful cost and quality data available to Utah patients and providers Composition • Health Data Committee leadership-Chair Alan Ormsby, AARP Utah • Utah Department of Health (UDOH) Office of Healthcare Statistics leadership and staff • HealthInsight Utah • Community – providers – payers – consumers/employers TAG Long-Term Objectives • Use transparency to improve quality and cost of care • Partner with Utah organizations to publish a series of reports with nationally created measures and local data that are: – Actionable and understandable to consumers – Reliable source for redesigning incentives – Accepted as reasonably valid and reliable by the provider community and include resources for improving measures • Act as an advisory body for Health Data Committee (HDC) and other organizations • Educate membership and community to elevate use of data for transparency in UT (TAG Charter 2013) TAG Products to Date • Developed and sent health data transparency priorities paper to Health Data Committee (August 2014) • http://utahhealthscape.org/ • http://ibis.health.utah.gov/indicator/view/L owBacPaiImaPro.MRI.SA_UTMap.html • First Quality Transparency measures sent to data vendor APCD Quality Measures for 2015 • • • • • Breast cancer screenings (50-75y) Well-child visits in first 15 months (NQF 1392) Diabetes measure: HbA1c testing (NQF 0057) Chlamydia Screening (NQF 0033) Avoidance of antibiotics for adults with acute bronchitis (NQF 0058) Note: Asthma care utilization and low back pain imaging are of interest, and the state will look at models for working with this data MEDICAL PROVIDER SUBCOMMITTEE Goals • Accurate and actionable cost and quality information is provided to providers and public • The health provider community has an opportunity to support the accuracy of the information provided • The provider community supports alignment of processes as appropriate for transparency work in Utah (such as data collection methods, attribution methods, a core set of measures) • Bring ideas for data use cases Target participants • Physicians with interest • Provider leaders from large clinics, health systems • Health Plan Medical Directors or Quality Analysts Actions Requested • Regular attendance and virtual comment on versions of APCD and other transparency data • Sharing to constituents as needed • Volunteering to validate parcels of data as we test attribution of patients to providers and providers to clinics • Participation to review organizational data for accuracy prior to release • Assist to develop solid processes for provider benefit from transparency Actions Requested (cont’d) • Attendees are willing to – Familiarize with topic – Critically assess for improvement – Suggest uses and processes for the data that will improve health for Utah Anticipated Activities • Meeting frequency- at most monthly • Committee work anticipated in 2015 – – – – Provider/Clinic attribution Provider/Patient attribution Discussion of Total Cost of Care Measures Processes for confidential sharing of quality data – Topics for future data queries of benefit to clinicians WIIFM • Ensure your data is appropriate • See some of the first cuts as we work through the process • Set a foundation for our community • Learn about transparency • Understand aggregate data, compare yourself to your community Provider Attribution Volunteers Needed • Any location and size – Distant locations will need to be willing to install the Adobe Connect plugin that allows our remote desktop sharing and file transfer • Custom reporting system that can generate – an entire patient roster (first, middle and last name and DOB) – registry lists for diabetes patients or some other way to generate diabetes diagnosis information for the entire population (can be meaningful use if the report has a denominator patient list ) • Best timing for custom reports run –during the day or after hours. • Excel or Open Office Calc on the desktop of the computer for sharing behind the firewall Meeting Preference polls • Day of the week • Time • Look for a poll to follow to select an acceptable meeting time Examples from CO, MN http://www.mnhealthscores.org https://www.comedprice.org/#/home https://www.comedprice.org/#/client Dr. Tyson on Data Any time scientists disagree, it's because we have insufficient data. Then we can agree on what kind of data to get; we get the data; and the data solves the problem. Either I'm right, or you're right, or we're both wrong. And we move on. That kind of conflict resolution does not exist in politics or religion. -Neil deGrasse Tyson, American astrophysicist, director of the Hayden Planetarium Questions Thank you Sarah Woolsey, MD, FAAFP Medical Director, HealthInsight Utah (801)694-9466 [email protected] www.healthinsight.org